Last updated: June 6, 2026
Paw Multiverse exists to give pet owners clear, trustworthy answers fast. Here is how we research and write what you read, so you can judge it for yourself.
Our food-safety and care content is built from established veterinary and animal-welfare sources — the kind of material vets, poison-control services and reputable animal charities publish. When sources disagree or evidence is thin, we say so rather than pretending there is a single clean answer. Our calculators use recognised formulas (for example, the resting-energy-requirement equation vets use for feeding), and we explain the maths on each tool page.
People usually arrive worried and in a hurry, so every food page opens with a plain verdict, then explains the why, the safe amount, the warning signs, and what to do if the food has already been eaten. We write in normal language, not jargon, and we flag genuine emergencies clearly instead of burying them.
We review pages for accuracy and update them when guidance changes. We are not infallible — if you spot something wrong or out of date, please tell us and we will check it and fix it promptly. Corrections to important safety information are made as a priority.
Advertising and any future affiliate partnerships never change our verdicts. The answer to “can dogs eat grapes” is “no” regardless of who advertises on the page. We do not accept payment for favourable coverage. See our Affiliate Disclosure.
However carefully we research, a website cannot examine your pet. Treat our content as a well-informed starting point and your veterinarian as the final word. See our Veterinary Disclaimer.